j. aaron simmons(6) mashup philosophy of religion – a special issue of journal for cultural and...
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J. Aaron Simmons Curriculum Vitae
Department of Philosophy Phone: (864)294-3526
Furman University
3300 Poinsett Hwy. Email: [email protected]
Greenville, SC 29613 Website: www.furman.edu/philosophy/simmons
Education
Ph.D. – Vanderbilt University, 2006, Philosophy
Dissertation: Violence and Singularity: Thinking Politics Otherwise with Rorty, Kierkegaard, and Levinas
Dissertation Committee: David Wood (director), Diane Perpich (director), John Lachs, Merold Westphal
M.A. – Vanderbilt University, 2005, Philosophy
M.A. – Florida State University, 2001, Humanities
Emphasis in Intellectual History with special focus on Romanticism
B.A. – Lee University, Magna Cum Laude, 1999, History with a Minor in Religion
Areas of Specialization 19
th and 20
th Century European Philosophy (esp. Existentialism and Phenomenology), Philosophy of Religion
Areas of Competence Political Philosophy, Environmental Philosophy, Ethics
Academic Positions
Fall 2011-Present Assistant Professor of Philosophy – Furman University
Fall 2010 – 2011 Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Distinguished Scholarships Advisor –
Hendrix College
2007- Spring 2010 Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy – Hendrix College
2006-2007 Lecturer in Philosophy – Vanderbilt University
Fall 2006 Teaching Supervisor – Vanderbilt University Center for Ethics
Oversaw four graduate students from the Vanderbilt Law School and Divinity
School who taught discussion sections for the Introduction to Ethics course in
the Philosophy Department
2005-2006 Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy – The University of the South
(Sewanee)
Publications Books
(1) God and the Other: Ethics and Politics After the Theological Turn, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana
University Press, 2011.
Reviews:
Endorsements on the book cover from John Davenport and Bruce Ellis Benson.
Sophia (2013). Reviewed by Jason A. Mahn.
“Facing Rortian Ethics with Levinas and Kierkegaard: A Review of J. Aaron Simmons’s God and the
Other,” Bulletin for the Study of Religion 41, no.3 (2012): 36-9. Reviewed by Jim Kanaris.
The Journal of Religion 92, no.3 (July 2012): 441-42. Reviewed by Michael Sohn.
Choice Magazine (2012). Reviewed by James K. A. Smith.
Review Symposium (featuring reviews by Stephen Minister, N.N. Trakakis, and Christina Smerick) –
http://theotherjournal.com/churchandpomo/ (Summer 2011)
Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy, forthcoming. Reviewed by Drew M. Dalton
International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, forthcoming.
Religious Studies Review, forthcoming.
(2) New Phenomenology: A Philosophical Introduction (co-authored with Bruce Ellis Benson), London:
Bloomsbury Press, 2013.
Reviews:
Endorsements on the book cover by Merold Westphal, Jeffrey Bloechl, and Joeri Schrijvers.
Edited Books and Journal Issues
(3) Reexamining Deconstruction and Determinate Religion: Toward a Religion with Religion (co-edited with
Stephen Minister), Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 2012.
Reviews:
Endorsements from Kevin Hart and Richard Kearney.
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2013). Reviewed by Neal DeRoo.
(4) Levinas and Kierkegaard: Ethics, Politics, and Religion, (co-edited with David Wood), Bloomington and
Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2008.
Reviews:
Jewish Book World (Summer 2009): 42-43.
Søren Kierkegaard Newsletter 55 (October 2009): 27-28 (review by Jeffrey Hansen)
(5) The Virtue of Justice – A Special Issue of Philosophia 41, no.2 (May 2013) (co-edited with John Sanders).
This special issue features invited essays by Nicholas Wolterstorff, Jean Porter, Michael Slote, and
Christopher Eberle as well as essays that were selected through a blind review process.
(6) Mashup Philosophy of Religion – A Special Issue of Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory dealing
with constructive philosophy of religion that draws on both analytic and continental resources. I am
currently inviting contributors and receiving submissions. The issue is scheduled to be published in the
Spring of 2015.
Journal Articles (* indicates peer reviewed)
(1) “A Goldilocks God,” (with John Sanders), Element (special issue on Open and Process theism),
forthcoming.
(2) * “On Shared Hopes for (Mashup) Philosophy of Religion: A Reply to Trakakis,” Heythrop Journal,
forthcoming. (To be published with responses from Nick Trakakis and Merold Westphal)
(3) “Postmodern Kataphaticism? A Constructive Proposal,” Analecta Hermeneutica 4 (2012), in a special
issue edited by Michelle Rebidoux entitled “Refiguring Divinity: Continental Philosophy of Religion.”
(4) * “Prospects for a Levinasian Epistemic Infinitism,” (with Scott F. Aikin), International Journal for
Philosophical Studies 20, no.3 (July 2012): 437-60.
(5) “Helping More than ‘A Little’: Recent Books on Kierkegaard and Philosophy of Religion,” International
Journal for Philosophy of Religion 72, no.3 (2012): 227-42.
(6) “In Whom, Then, Do We Put Our Trust?—Thinking About Levinas with Drew Dalton,” The Journal for
Cultural and Religious Theory 11, no.3 (Fall 2011): 37-45. I also wrote the introduction to the review
symposium in which my essay appeared: “Reading with Drew M. Dalton: A Constructive Review
Symposium,” The Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory 11, no.3 (Fall 2011): 20-21.
(7) * “Levinas and Whitehead: Notes toward a Conversation to come” (with Jay McDaniel), Process Studies
40, no.1 (2011): 26-53. (A revised version—peer reviewed in China—has also been published in Chinese
in World Philosophy 4, (2011): 92-107).
(8) * “Gabriel Biel and Occasionalism: Overcoming an Apparent Tension” (with Fred Ablondi), History of
Philosophy Quarterly 28, no.2 (April 2011): 159-74.
(9) * “Heretics Everywhere: On the Continuing Relevance of Galileo for Philosophy of Religion” (with Fred
Ablondi), Philosophy and Theology 22, no.1-2 (2010): 49-76
(10) “‘A Faith Without Triumph’: Emmanuel Levinas and Prophetic Pragmatism,” Reflections on Levinas:
Mono Kurgusuz Labirent 4, no.8-9 (Fall 2010):467-84. (Also published in Turkish as: “Zaferden Yoksun
İnanç: Emmanuel Levinas ve Kahin Pragmatizmi”). A revised version is being published in Rorty and
Common Faith: Jewish Engagements with a Secular Philosopher, ed. Jacob Goodson.
(11) * “Revisiting Gender Inclusive God-Talk: A New, Wesleyan Argument” (with Mason Marshall).
Philosophy and Theology 20, no.1 (Fall 2009): 241-61.
(12) * “Teaching Plato with Emoticons” (with Scott F. Aikin), APA Newsletter on Teaching Philosophy 9, no.1
(Fall 2009): 5-7.
(13) * “‘Vision Without Image’: A Levinasian Topology,” Southwest Philosophy Review 25, no.1 (2009): 23-
31.
(14) * “From Necessity to Hope: A Continental Perspective on Eschatology Without Telos” (with Nathan R.
Kerr), Heythrop Journal 50, no.6 (Fall 2009): 948-65.
(15) * “Levinasian Otherism, Skepticism, and the Problem of Self-Refutation” (with Scott F. Aikin),
Philosophical Forum 40, no. 1 (Spring 2009): 29-54.
(16) * “Evangelical Environmentalism: Oxymoron or Opportunity?” Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture,
and Ecology 13, no. 1 (Spring 2009): 37-68.
(17) * “God in Recent French Phenomenology,” Philosophy Compass 3, no.5 (Fall 2008): 910-32.
(18) * “Is Continental Philosophy Just Catholicism for Atheists? On The Political Relevance of Kenosis,”
Philosophy in the Contemporary World 15, no.1 (Spring 2008): 94-111.
(19) * “What About Isaac? Re-Reading Fear and Trembling and Re-Thinking Kierkegaardian Ethics,” Journal
of Religious Ethics 35, no.2 (Spring 2007): 319-45.
(20) * “Politics as an Ethico-Religious Task: Kierkegaard and Levinas on Religion in the Public Square,”
Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal 89, no.1-2 (Spring/Summer 2006): 1001-1018.
(21) A Review Essay of, David F. Wells, Above All Earthly Pow’rs: Christ in a Postmodern World (Grand
Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2005). The Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory
8, no.1 (Winter 2006).
(22) * “Finding Uses for Used-Up Words: Thinking Weltanschauung ‘After’ Heidegger,” Philosophy Today 50,
no. 2 (Summer 2006): 156-169.
(23) * “Making Tomorrow Better than Today: Rorty’s Dismissal of Levinasian Ethics” (with Diane Perpich),
Symposium 9, no. 2 (Fall 2005): 241-266.
Book Chapters
(24) “The Relevance of Philosophy of Religion to the Academic Study of Religion.” In Philosophy of Religion
for Religious Studies, ed. Timothy Knepper. To be completed by Fall 2013.
(25) “Continental Philosophy,” in The Oxford Handbook to the Epistemology of Theology, eds. William J.
Abraham and Frederick Aquino (Oxford University Press), under contract. To be completed by Fall 2013.
(26) “Malebranche and Suarez on the Power of Secondary Causes: A Contemporary Consideration,” (with Fred
Ablondi), in Occasionalism: East and West, ed. Nazif Muhtaroglu (currently being considered by Springer
Press).
(27) “A Pentecostal Kierkegaard?” in Kierkegaard on Revelation, Divine Knowledge, and Ethics, ed. Aaron E.
Hinkley (Springer Press, forthcoming).
(28) “So Many Faces: God, Humans, and Animals,” (with Jay McDaniel), in Divinanimality: Animal Theory,
Creaturely Theology, ed. Stephen Moore (Fordham University Press, forthcoming).
(29) “Apologetics After Objectivity,” in Reexamining Deconstruction and Determinate Religion: Toward a
Religion With Religion, eds. J. Aaron Simmons and Stephen Minister (Pittsburgh: Duquesne University
Press, 2012).
(30) “Introduction: On Necessary Interruptions” in Reexamining Deconstruction and Determinate Religion:
Toward A Religion With Religion, eds. J. Aaron Simmons and Stephen Minister (Pittsburgh: Duquesne
University Press).
(31) “Richard Rorty: Kierkegaard in the Context of Neo-Pragmatism,” in Kierkegaard Research: Sources,
Reception, and Resources: Vol.11, Kierkegaard’s Influence on Philosophy: Tome III: Anglophone
Philosophy, ed. Jon Stewart (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012), 177-202.
(32) “Toward a Relational Model of Anthropocentrism: A Levinasian Approach to the Ethics of Climate
Change,” in Faces of Nature: Levinasian Ethics and Environmental Thought, eds. William Edelglass, Chris
Diehm, and Jim Hatley (Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 2012), 229-252.
(33) “Continuing to Look for God in France: On the Relationship Between Phenomenology and Theology,”
Words of Life: New Theological Turns in French Phenomenology, ed. Bruce Ellis Benson and Norman
Wirzba (New York: Fordham University Press, 2010), 15-29.
My essay is discussed in some detail in the following review of the book: Sergiu Sava, “From
Phenomenology to Theology: You Spin Me Round,” Meta: Research in Hermeneutics,
Phenomenology, and Practical Philosophy 3, no.1 (June 2011: 216-20).
(34) “Existential Appropriations: Jean Wahl’s Influence on Levinas’s Reading of Kierkegaard,” in Kierkegaard
and Levinas: Ethics, Politics, and Religion, ed. J. Aaron Simmons and David Wood, (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2008), 41-66.
(35) “Good Fences May Not Make Good Neighbors After All” (with David Wood), in Kierkegaard and
Levinas: Ethics, Politics, and Religion, ed. J. Aaron Simmons and David Wood (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 2008), 1-17.
Interviews, Commentaries, and Replies
(36) “On the Future of Futurity: An Engagement with DeRoo,” The Other Journal: the Church and
Postmodernism (forthcoming: October 2013), www.theotherjournal.org/churchandpomo.
(37) “Philosophy and Theology . . . Analytic or Not,” The Other Journal: The Church and Postmodernism (June
2013). www.theotherjournal.org/churchandpomo.
(38) “Justice, Luck, and Equality: A Response to Cervantez,” Southwest Philosophy Review 27, no.2 (July,
2011): 9-14.
(39) “On Postmodern Epistemology: A Rejoinder to Hackett” The Other Journal: The Church and
Postmodernism (January 2012). www.theotherjournal.org/churchandpomo
(40) “Religion in the Postmodern Public Square: Thinking After Stephen Minister,” in Reexamining
Deconstruction and Determinate Religion: Towards a Religion with Religion, eds., J. Aaron Simmons and
Stephen Minister (Duquesne University Press, 2012).
(41) “Perhaps Still A Bit Farther Off Than We Think: Engaging Bruce Ellis Benson,” in Reexamining
Deconstruction and Determinate Religion: Towards a Religion with Religion, eds., J. Aaron Simmons and
Stephen Minister (Duquesne University Press, 2012).
(42) “On the Relevance of Philosophy of Religion to Religious Studies: Of Gaps and Gratitude. The Other
Journal: The Church and Postmodernism (May 2012). www.theotherjournal.org/churchandpomo
(43) “On Being Inspired by Levinas: An Interview with J. Aaron Simmons” (Interviewed by Volkan Çelebi),
Reflections on Levinas: Mono Kurgusuz Labirent 4, no.8-9 (Fall 2010): 646-56.
(44) “On Risks Worth Taking: A Reply to Minister and Smerick,” The Church and Postmodernism: A
Conversation (www.theotherjournal.org/churchandpomo) (July 2011).
(45) “Perhaps Marion and Plantinga are Both Right: A Reply to Trakakis,” The Church and Postmodernism: A
Conversation (www.theotherjournal.org/churchandpomo) (August 2011).
(46) “Moments of Intense Presence: An Interview with David Wood,” Journal for Cultural and Religious
Theory 10, no.1 (Winter 2009): 81-101.
This interview is being reprinted in a book of interviews that appeared in the Journal for Cultural and
Religious Theory 2001-2012, ed. Victor Taylor (Davies Group Publishers, forthcoming).
(47) “Become Joyful, Become Active, But Do Not Forget About Being Responsible: A Commentary on Anupa
Batra’s ‘Deleuze’s Ethics: An Interpretation Through His Reading of Spinoza’,” Southwest Philosophy
Review 23, no.2 (2007): 21-6.
Translations
(48) Pierre Hadot, “There are Nowadays Professors of Philosophy, but not Philosophers,” The Journal of
Speculative Philosophy 19, no. 3 (Fall 2005): 229-37. (Translated from French)
Book Reviews
In Academic Journals:
(49) Calvin O. Schrag, Reflections on the Religious, the Ethical, and the Political, ed. Michael R. Paradiso-
Michau (Lexington Books, 2013). In Sophia, forthcoming.
(50) Nick Trakakis, The End of Philosophy of Religion (Continuum: 2009). In Sophia 51, no.3 (2012): 407-10.
(51) Nimi Wariboko, The Pentecostal Principle: Ethical Methodology in New Spirit (Eerdmans, 2012). In
Religious Studies Review 38, no.3 (2012): 155.
(52) James K.A. Smith, Thinking in Tongues: Pentecostal Contributions to Christian Philosophy (Eerdmans,
2010). In Theology Today 68, no.4 (2012): 492-93.
(53) Paul Marcus, Being for the Other: Emmanuel Levinas, Ethical Living, and Psychoanalysis (Marquette
University Press, 2008). In Heythrop Journal (May 2010): 504-06.
(54) David Michael Kleinberg-Levin, Before the Voice of Reason: Echoes of Responsibility in Merleau-Ponty’s
Ecology and Levinas’s Ethics (Albany: State University of New York Press), 2008. In Environmental
Philosophy 6, no.2 (Fall 2009): 4-7.
(55) Merold Westphal, Levinas and Kierkegaard in Dialogue, (Bloomington: Indiana University Press). In
Søren Kierkegaard Society Newsletter no. 54 (March 2009): 28-30.
(56) Kirsteen Kim, The Holy Spirit in the World: A Global Conversation, (Maryknoll: Orbis Books). In Pneuma
30 (Fall 2008): 359-60.
(57) Michael Purcell, Levinas and Theology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006). In Philosophy In
Review 27, no.3 (June 2007): 227-29.
(58) L. Gregory Jones, Reinhard Hütter, and C. Rosalee Velloso Ewell, eds., God, Truth, and Witness:
Engaging Stanley Hauerwas (Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2005). In The Journal for Cultural and
Religious Theory (Fall 2007): 146-52.
(59) Peter Jonkers and Ruud Welten, eds., God in France: Eight Contemporary French Thinkers on God
(Leuven: Peeters, 2005). In Bulletin de la Société Américaine de Philosophie de Langue Française 15,
no.2 (Spring 2007): 99-105.
(60) Judith Butler, Giving An Account of Oneself (New York: Fordham University Press, 2005). In The Journal
for Cultural and Religious Theory 7, no.2 (Spring 2006).
(61) Richard Rorty and Gianni Vattimo, The Future of Religion, ed. Santiago Zabala (New York: Columbia
University Press, 2005). In Philosophia Christi 7, no.2 (Winter 2005): 524-528.
(62) Elsebet Jegstrup, ed., The New Kierkegaard (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004). In Teaching
Philosophy 28, no. 2 (June 2005): 191-94.
In Choice Magazine
(63) Neal DeRoo, Futurity in Phenomenology: Promise and Method in Husserl, Levinas, and Derrida (New
York, NY: Fordham University Press, 2013). In Choice Magazine (forthcoming).
(64) Dan Zahavi, ed. The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Epistemology (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2012). In Choice Magazine (forthcoming).
(65) R. Keith Loftin, ed. God and Morality: Four Views (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2012). In
Choice Magazine (May 2013).
(66) Chris L. Firestone and Nathan A. Jacobs, eds. The Persistence of the Sacred in Modern Thought (Notre
Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2012). In Choice Magazine (February 2013).
(67) Gavin Flood, The Importance of Religion: Meaning and Action in Our Strange World (Malden and Oxford:
Wiley-Blackwell, 2012). In Choice Magazine (January 2013).
(68) Shaun Gallagher and Dan Zahavi, The Phenomenological Mind, 2nd
Ed., (New York and London:
Routledge, 2012). In Choice Magazine (December 2012).
(69) Scott Davidson and Diane Perpich, eds. Totality and Infinity at 50 (Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press,
2012). In Choice Magazine (October 2012).
(70) Samuel Fleischacker, Divine Teaching and The Way of The World: A Defense of Revealed Religion.
(Oxford University Press, 2011). In Choice Magazine (September 2012).
(71) Hugo Strandberg, Love of a God of Love: Towards a Transformation of the Philosophy of Religion
(Continuum, 2011), Choice Magazine (July 2012).
(72) John Witte Jr. and Christian Green, eds., Religion and Human Rights: An Introduction (Oxford University
Press, 2011), Choice Magazine (May 2012).
Popular Audience Essays and Other Publications
(73) “We Are Still Them: Non-Denominationalism and the Hermeneutics of Silence,” The Other Journal:
Church and Postmodern Culture (December 2011). www.theotherjournal.org/churchandpomo
(74) “On Fecundity, Fidelity, and Expectation: Reflections on Philosophy and Fatherhood,” in Papa, Ph.D.:
Essays on Fatherhood by Men in the Academy, ed. Mary Ruth Marotte and Paige Martin Reynolds (New
Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 2011), 59-65.
(75) “Between Tonight and Tomorrow: On Obama’s Election,” Log Cabin Democrat (Conway, AR), November
6, 2008.
(76) “Index,” for David Wood, The Step Back: Ethics and Politics After Deconstruction, (Albany: SUNY Press,
2005).
(77) “Index” (with Chad Maxson), for Truth: A Dialogue Between Philosophical Traditions, eds. David Wood
and Jose Medina, (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005).
Works in Progress/Under Review
A New Phenomenology Reader – co-edited with Bruce Ellis Benson. This will be the first reader
dealing with new phenomenology. It also will feature new essays by some of the leading scholars
working in the field. Currently we are finishing the proposal and Bloomsbury has expressed initial
interest.
New Waves in Phenomenology – co-edited with Ed Hackett. We are currently finishing the proposal
for Palgrave’s “New Waves in Philosophy” series.
Deconstructive Epistemology – This will be my next single-authored monograph. It will bring
continental philosophy of religion into conversation with analytic epistemology. The focus will be on
theories of justification and evidence in postmodernism. I am still in the early stages of writing, but I
have been exploring this general topic in a series of journal articles and book chapters over the last
couple years.
Heavenly Minded and Earthly Good: Evangelical Political Culture and Environmentalism (a book
manuscript that is done except for the final chapter).
“Is Levinas A Liberal Democrat?”, currently in progress.
“A Process Phenomenology,” currently in progress.
“Continental Philosophy of Religion: A Future,” currently in progress.
“On the Continued Relevance of Impossible Ethical Ideals: Niebuhr and Levinas” (with Kevin
Carnahan), currently in progress.
Scholarly Engagements with My Work:
Nick Trakakis, “New Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy of Religion,” Heythrop Journal,
forthcoming.
Merold Westphal, “Must Phenomenology and Theology Make Two? A Response to Trakakis and
Simmons,” Heythrop Journal, forthcoming.
John D. Caputo, “On Not Settling for an Abridged Version of Postmodernism,” in Reexamining
Deconstruction and Determinate Religion: Toward a Religion with Religion, eds. J. Aaron Simmons
and Stephen Minister (Duquesne University Press, forthcoming). Stephen Minister, “The Optics of Responsibility,” Southwest Philosophy Review 25, no.2 (July 2009):
1-5.
Courses Taught
Philosophy Courses
Freshman Seminars
The Nature of the Political; God and Justice
Introductory Level
Logic; Introduction to Philosophical Questioning; Environmental Philosophy; Self and Society; The Self, The
World, and the Other; God, Self, and Rationality; Environmental Ethics (discussion section); The Ethics of
Forgiveness (discussion section); Introduction to Philosophy and Moral Choices
Intermediate Level
Ethics and Society; Philosophy and Literature; Existentialism; Humans and their Others; Philosophy and
Popular Culture; Environmental Philosophy; Philosophy of Religion; Ethical Theory; 19th
Century Philosophy
Advanced Level
Postmodernism: Heidegger, Levinas, and Derrida; The Postmodern God; Kierkegaard; Political Ontology in
Heidegger and Arendt, 20th
Century Philosophy; Rawls and His Critics
Graduate Seminars
Phenomenology
Directed Independent Studies
Radical Political Theory; Sartre and De Beauvoir; Contemporary Feminist Ethics; Richard Rorty; The Ethics of
Non-Profit Organizations; The Postmodern God; Emmanuel Levinas
Interdisciplinary Humanities Courses
Modern Humanities: The Enlightenment to Postmodernism; Multicultural Dimensions of Film in Twentieth
Century American Culture; Renaissance Intellectual History and Philosophy, Journeys (a core humanities class
required of all freshman at Hendrix College)
Senior Theses Directed:
Jacob Zimmerman—“Wittgenstein and Contextualism” (Furman 2014 – in process)
Matthew Burchanoski—“Postmodern or Postmordem? Ethical Hermeneutics After the Death of the
Author” (Furman, 2013)
Zora McBride—“Subjectivity After the Death of the Subject” (Hendrix, 2010)
Elliott Machin—“Kant and Schiller on the Transformation of the Struggle Between Objectivity and
Subjectivity” (Hendrix, 2010)
Liza Poris—“A New Argument for Rationality: The Conversion of C.S. Lewis and Antony Flew”
(Hendrix, 2010)
Houston Hughes—“Between Plantinga and Dawkins: A Critical Reply to the New Atheism” (Hendrix,
2009)
Johnathan Boswell—“The Contemporary Relevance of the Ontological Argument” (Hendrix, 2009)
Chad Owens—“Cass Sunstein’s Critique of Liberal Democracy” (Hendrix, 2008)
James Murray—“I and I: Rastafari Ontology” (Hendrix, 2008)
Committee Member for Independent Interdisciplinary Majors at Hendrix College:
Lana Allen—“Political Theory” (Director)
Jennifer Baker—“Social Justice and Sustainability” (Director)
Emily Mitchell—“Organizational Leadership” (Director)
Laura Langley—“Medieval and Renaissance Studies”
Professional Service Member of National Endowment for the Humanities Grant Selection Committee (Washington, D.C., July 2013)
Referee for Oxford University Press
Referee for Humanities (Special issue on Richard Rorty)
Referee for Routledge Press
Referee for Wadsworth/Thompson Learning Inc.
Referee for History of Philosophy Quarterly
Referee for Journal of Religious Ethics
Referee for Sophia
Referee for Pneuma: The Journal of the Society of Pentecostal Studies
Referee for Philosophy in the Contemporary World
Referee for Philosophia Christi
Referee for Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory
Referee for Southwest Philosophy Review
Referee for the Journal of the National Conference for Undergraduate Research
Referee for North Texas Philosophical Association
Referee for South Carolina Philosophical Association
Invited Regular Reviewer for Choice Magazine
Invited Regular Contributor to The Church and Postmodernism: A Conversation
(http://theotherjournal.com/churchandpomo/)
University Service Furman University:
Lilly Partners Program (2012-2013)
Furman University Guest Coach Program Co-Facilitator (with Rob Carson) (2012-present)
I also was responsible for proposing the program and getting it adopted by Furman University during
the 2011-2012 school year.
Faculty Guest Coach for Furman Football (2012-2013)
Individualized Curriculum Committee (2012-present)
Presidential Task Force for Civil Discourse (2011-2013)
Sponsor of Furman University Animal Rights Club (2011-present)
Sports Marketing Committee (2011-2012)
Sexual Harassment and Rape Prevention Committee (2011-present)
Hendrix College:
Odyssey Categories Advisory Committee (2010-2011)
Hendrix Honors Committee (Fall 2010-2011)
Diversity Concerns Committee, Chair (2008-2010)
Maymester Evaluation Committee (2009-2010)
Working Group on Integrating Sustainability into the Curriculum (2008-2009)
Faculty Fellow for Hendrix Varsity Baseball Team (2008-2011)
Departmental Service Furman University:
Host of weekly Philosophy Lunches in the Furman Dining Hall
Sponsor of the Furman University Philosophy Club (2011-present)
Editor of the Annual Furman Philosophy Department Newsletter (2011-present)
SACS Department Review team for PHL-101 (with Carl Ehrett) (Summer 2012)
Furman University Philosophy Department Webmaster (2011-present)
Hendrix College:
Hendrix Philosophy Department Webmaster (Hendrix 2007-2011)
Sponsor of Hendrix University Philosophy Club (Hendrix 2007-2011)
Community Service Ex-Officio Board Member for “Sustaining Way” (a non-profit in Greenville, SC working on issues of
sustainability and social justice) (2012-present)
Bridges to a Brighter Future Buddy Program (I mentor an underprivileged, first-generation college
student from Greenville who is going to the University of South Carolina) (2012-present)
Reading Languages French – Passed departmental translation requirement, Fall 2003
German – Passed reading exam, Spring 2004
Danish – Intensive study at St. Olaf College, Summer 2004
Academic Experience (Non-teaching) 2010-2011 Undergraduate Research Coordinator (Hendrix College)
2007-2011 Board Member – Marshall T. Steel Center for the Study of Philosophy and Religion (Hendrix)
2009 Session Chair – Søren Kierkegaard Society Meeting as part of the American Philosophical
Association (Eastern Division), New York, NY.
2007 Session Chair – Metaphysical Society of America, Nashville, TN
2006-2007 Research Fellow – for an interdisciplinary faculty research group focused on the issue of Eco-
Spirituality. The group is funded by a grant from the Vanderbilt University Center for the Study
of Religion and Culture and is organized by David Wood and Beth Conklin.
2004-2006 Research Assistant – Vanderbilt University, for John Stuhr
2004 Research Assistant – Vanderbilt University, for Diane Perpich
2004 Editorial Assistant – Bulletin de la Société Américaine de Philosophie de Langue Française
2003 Editorial Assistant – David Wood and Jose Medina, eds., Truth: A Dialogue Between
Philosophical Traditions, (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005)
2002 Session Chair – “International Conference of Romanticism,” Tallahassee, FL
2001 Session Chair – “Conference on Film and Literature,” Florida State University
Academic Presentations (Selected)
2013
(1) Upcoming - “A Kierkegaardian Contribution to Debates About Divine Personalism,” Søren Kierkegaard
Society (at the national American Academy of Religion), Baltimore, MD.
(2) “Continental Approaches to Religious Epistemology,” University of South Carolina (invited).
(3) “Risk, Prayer, and Persons,” Society for Christian Philosophers (Midwest Regional Meeting), Georgetown
College, KY.
(4) “Malebranche and Suarez on the Power of Secondary Causes: A Contemporary Consideration” (with Fred
Ablondi), “Occasionalism: East and West,” Harvard University. [Paper presented in absentia by Fred
Ablondi]
(5) “Toward a Postmodern Kataphaticism: A Constructive Proposal for Contemporary Continental Philosophy
of Religion,” South Carolina Society of Philosophy, Charleston, SC.
(6) “Not So Markedly Different: A Critique of John Caputo’s Account of Analytic Philosophy of Religion,”
Society for Philosophy of Religion, Hilton Head, SC.
(7) “Inhabiting an Open Future: The Practical Relevance of an Open Model of God,” Open Theism
Symposium, Western Carolina University (invited).
2012
(8) “Heidegger, Onto-theology, and Persons,” Joint session with the International Institute for Field-Being and
the Michael Polyani Society at the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association.
(9) “John Caputo’s Problematic Account of Philosophy of Religion: A Critical Response,” Tennessee
Philosophical Association, Nashville, TN.
(10) “If God is Dead, then What Are Philosophers of Religion Talking About?,” Florida Southern College
(invited)
(11) “Arendt on Identity Politics: Rescuing Heidegger?” (with Kim Maslin-Wicks), Association for Political
Theory, Columbia, SC.
(12) “What Remains of God Today?” University of Alabama, Department of Religious Studies Endowed
Lecture Series on Religion and Culture (invited).
(13) “On the Continued Relevance of Impossible Ethical Ideals: Niebuhr and Levinas” (with Kevin Carnahan),
The Personalist Seminar IX: Dewey and Niebuhr.
(14) “Continental Philosophy of Religion: A Primer,” Marlboro College (virtual lecture).
(15) “On the Importance of Philosophy of Religion to the Academic Study of Religion,” Western Carolina
University (invited).
(16) “A Goldilocks God: A Comment on Contemporary Philosophy of Religion,” Western Carolina University
(invited).
(17) “Evangelical Christianity and Environmental Activism,” Wingate University (invited).
2011
(18) “Listening to Animals: Continental Philosophy and Process Thought in Conversation,” (with Jay
McDaniel), presented by Jay McDaniel at Transdisciplinary Theological Colloquium XI: Divinanimality:
Creaturely Theology, Drew University.
(19) “Continental Philosophy of Religion: A Future,” Western Carolina University (invited).
(20) “On Postmodern Apologetics,” The Carolina Continental Symposium, Asheville, NC (invited).
(21) “Levinasian Approaches to Epistemology,” North American Levinas Society, College Station, TX.
(22) “In Whom, Then, Should We Trust,” North American Levinas Society, College Station, TX.
2010
(23) “A Goldilocks God?” (with John Sanders). National American Academy of Religion Meeting – Philosophy
of Religion Section, Atlanta, GA.
(24) “Justice than Which None Greater Can be Conceived: Defending An Open Approach to Alterity and
Responding to John Caputo” (with John Sanders). National American Academy of Religion Meeting –
Open and Relational Theology Group, Atlanta, GA.
(25) “Reconsidering Luck.” Southwestern Philosophical Society, Memphis, TN.
(26) “Environmentalism and Evangelical Politics.” University of Central Arkansas (invited).
(27) “Social Justice in an Environmental Age,” Rhodes College (invited).
(28) “Reading Levinas and Derrida After Audi: An Argument for the Viability of Foundationalism in New
Phenomenology,” MidSouth Philosophy Conference, Memphis, TN.
(29) “So Now What: A Commentary on Carlson’s Rule-Circularity and the Justification of Deduction,”
MidSouth Philosophy Conference, Memphis, TN.
(30) “Levinasian Otherism and Modest Foundationalism,” North Texas Philosophical Association, Denton, TX.
2009
(31) “Between Walzer and Levinas: Political Viability as a Regulative Constraint on Environmental
Philosophy,” Society for Social and Political Philosophy (in conjunction with the Eastern Division Meeting
of the American Philosophical Association), New York, NY.
(32) Commentary on Kierkegaard Panel, Søren Kierkegaard Society (in conjunction with the Easter Division
Meeting of the American Philosophical Association), New York, NY.
(33) “Fecundity, Fidelity, and Expectation: Reflections on Philosophy and Fatherhood,” Arkansas Philological
Association, Eureka Springs, AR.
(34) “Heavenly Minded and Earthly Good: Evangelical Christianity and Environmental Ethics,” Central
Methodist University (invited).
(35) “Climate Change as Meta-Ethical Emergency: An Argument for a Relational Anthropocentrism,”
MidSouth Philosophy Conference, Memphis, TN.
(36) “A Not So Impotent Rights Theory: A Response to Merriam,” MidSouth Philosophy Conference,
Memphis, TN.
(37) “Is Anthropocentrism the Best Model for Contemporary Environmental Ethics?” Co-presented with Steven
Smith, Tri-State Liberal Arts Philosophy Symposium, Conway, AR
(38) “Widows, Orphans, Strangers, and Swamp-Marshes,” Harding University (invited).
2008
(39) “Existential Appropriations: The Influence of Jean Wahl on Levinas’s Reading of Kierkegaard,” Søren
Kierkegaard Society (in conjunction with the national meeting of the American Academy of Religion),
Chicago, IL (invited).
(40) “Vision Without Image: A Levinasian Topology,” Southwestern Philosophical Society, Kansas City, MO.
(41) “Reconstructive Separatism: What Has Phenomenology to do with Theology?” University of Mississippi
(invited).
(42) “Simul Justus et Peccator: Dissociative Identity, Deconstructive Selfhood, and the Religion of DMX,”
(with Jonathan Stadler), Popular and American Culture Association of the South, Louisville, KY.
(43) “What Does ‘Ethics’ Mean in Postmodernism?” Harding University (invited).
(44) “Levinasian Otherism, Skepticism, and the Problem of Self-Refutation,” (with Scott F. Aikin), MidSouth
Philosophy Conference, Memphis, TN.
(45) “On Giving and Receiving Accounts: Justification in a Deconstructive Democracy,” American Academy of
Religion Southwestern Regional Conference, Dallas, TX.
(46) “Opposition or Interlocutor? New Possibilities for Contemporary Continental Philosophy of Religion,”
Mississippi Philosophical Association, Memphis, TN.
(47) “Five Themes in New Phenomenology,” North Texas Philosophical Association, Denton, TX.
(48) “If I Came Naked Thus . . . GeoCultural Constraints on Deliberation and an Appeal for Environmental
Theo-Praxy,” Climate Change and Consumption: An Interdisciplinary Conference, Nashville, TN.
(49) “Eschatology Without a Telos” (with Nathan R. Kerr), Wesleyan Philosophical Society, Duke University.
(50) “Is Caring for People the Key to Caring for the Environment?” Vanderbilt University Berry Lecture
(invited keynote address).
2007
(51) “Politics, Religion, and The Environment,” Vanderbilt University (invited).
(52) “Ecotheology and Christian Environmentalism;” Hendrix College (invited).
(53) “Joy and Desire in Postmodernity” (with John Simmons), C.S. Lewis Foundation Southeastern Regional
Conference, Nashville, TN.
(54) “Vision Without Image: Levinas’s Challenge to Philosophical Sight,” as part of a panel entitled Time,
Image, and the Other: Levinas and Cinema; The North American Levinas Society, Purdue, IL
(55) “Theology as Practice: A Wesleyan Response to a Feminist Version of the Problem of Evil” (with Mason
Marshall), Wesleyan Theological Society, Bourbonnais, IL
(56) “The Ontological Stakes of the Political,” Wheaton College (invited)
(57) “‘I Believe that I Believe’: Postmodern Catholic Resources for Contemporary Evangelicalism,” Wesleyan
Philosophical Society, Bourbonnais, IL
(58) “Is Continental Philosophy Just Catholicism for Atheists? On the Political Relevance of Kenosis,” The
University of Dayton (invited)
2006
(59) Commentary on Anupa Batra’s “Deleuze’s Ethics: An Interpretation through his Reading of Spinoza,”
Southwestern Philosophical Society, Nashville, TN
(60) “From Wyschogrod to Bonhoeffer: Is Postmodern Prescriptivity Possible?” Tennessee Philosophical
Association, Nashville, TN
(61) “Is Levinas a Liberal Democrat?” North American Levinas Society, West Lafayette, IN
(62) “Standing Before God By Standing Next To Others: Kierkegaard on Ethics and Ontology,” The Society of
Christian Philosophers, Notre Dame, IN
(63) “Continuing to Look for God in France: On the Relationship Between Phenomenology and Theology,”
Society of Continental Philosophy and Theology, Birmingham, AL
(64) “Politics as an Ethico-Religious Task: Re-thinking Religion and the Nation with Kierkegaard and Levinas,”
Religion and the Nation: University of Tennessee Nexus Conference
(65) “Kenosis and Political Critique – Or, Why So Much God-Talk in Continental Philosophy?” Colby College
(invited)
2005
(66) “Kierkegaardian Transparency and Ethical Selfhood,” Tennessee Philosophical Association, Nashville, TN
(67) Commentary on Kristie Dotson’s “Emmanuel Levinas on Husserl’s ‘Fifth Cartesian Meditation’,”
Tennessee Philosophical Association, Nashville, TN
(68) “Missing the Other and Missing the Point: Richard Rorty’s Formalist Critique of Emmanuel Levinas,”
Encounters with the Other Conference, Loyola University Chicago
(69) “Making Tomorrow Better Than Today: Rorty’s Dismissal of Levinasian Ethics,” (with Diane Perpich),
Philosophical Collaborations Conference, Southern Illinois University
2004
(70) “Traces of Transcendence: A Possible Account of Platonic Forms,” Tennessee Philosophical Association,
Nashville, TN
(71) Commentary on Mason Marshall’s paper, “The Doctrine of Recollection and Psychagogical Paradox in
Plato’s Meno,” Tennessee Philosophical Association, Nashville, TN
(72) “Finding Uses for Used-up Words: Thinking Weltanschauung ‘After’ Heidegger;” After Worldview Civitas
Conference, Cornerstone University
(73) “What About Isaac? God and Politics in Kierkegaard’s Fear and Trembling,” The University of the South
(invited)
(74) “Maintaining the Paradox: Wittgenstein, Kierkegaard and the Possibility of the Religious Life,” Covenant
College (invited)
(75) “The Alterity of Testimony: Trauma and Truth in Levinas and Heidegger,” Address to the Lee University
Philosophical and Psychological Societies (invited)
2003
(76) “The Conversation of Freedom: Indirect Communication in Kierkegaard and Emerson,” Emerson
Bicentennial Conference, Vanderbilt University
(77) “Substituting-Ahead: Levinas Beyond Heidegger Towards Heidegger,” Emory University Graduate
Conference
(78) “Encountering the Other: An Introduction to the thought of Emmanuel Levinas,” Address to the Lee
University Philosophical Society (invited)
2002
(79) “Why Not Take All of Me: The Role of Passion in the Hegelian Dialectic,” Tennessee Philosophical
Association, Nashville, TN
(80) “The Trembling Approach: Towards a Kierkegaardian Sublime,” International Conference of
Romanticism, Tallahassee, FL
2001
(81) “Kant’s Sublime and Foucault’s Pipe: Pleasurable Pain in Aesthetic Dissimilitude,” Conference on Film
and Literature, Florida State University
Invited Public Lectures (Non-academic) 2012
Panelist for “Morality in Modern Art” – Warehouse Theater, Greenville, SC.
Panelist for “Staging the Minefield: Context, Controversy, and the Artist” – Warehouse Theater,
Greenville, SC.
2010
“Justice as a Way of Life,” Harding University Forum on Peace and Justice
2009
“Navigating the Postmodern World: A Discussion of Kierkegaard and Levinas: Ethics, Politics, and
Religion,” Faulkner County Public Library
“Why Every Christian Should Read Nietzsche,” First United Methodist Church, Conway, AR
2008
“On Postmodern Apologetics,” First United Methodist Church, Conway, AR
2006
“Four Theses on the Future of Christian Environmentalism,” Nashville Forum on Christianity and the
Environment
Conferences and Events Organized 2014 South Carolina Society of Philosophy Annual Conference – to be held at Furman University (co-
organized with Erik Anderson). Featuring a keynote lecture by Robert Talisse.
2013 “Kierkegaard and Judaism” – Session of the Søren Kierkegaard Society at the American Academy
of Religion national meeting.
2013 Philosophy of Religion sessions for the American Academy of Religion (Southeast Region –
SECSOR): (1) Jewish Philosophy of Religion (jointly sponsored with the Judaism Section); (2)
Public Theology 2.0: Philosophy of Religion and Theology in a Digital Age (jointly sponsored
with the Constructive Theology Section): (3) Gendered Readings of Religion: Postmodern
Engagements.
2012 “The Virtue of Justice,” Society of Christian Philosophers – Central Regional Meeting (at Hendrix
College). Featuring Plenary Sessions with Nicholas Wolterstorff, Robert Audi, and Jean Porter
2012 Three Philosophy of Religion sessions for the American Academy of Religion (Southeast Region
– SECSOR): (1) Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of Religion, (2) Open Theism and
Postmodernism, (3) Beauty, Power, and the Paranormal
2010 Symposium on Medical Humanities (Hendrix College)
2009 Tri-State Liberal Arts Philosophy Symposium (featuring Hendrix College, Rhodes College, and
Millsaps College)
o I was one of the founders of this event, which has now occurred annually for the past four
years.
2009 For the Least of These Our Brethren: Faith, Justice and the Environment (with Scharmel Roussel
and Leo Hauser). Little Rock, Arkansas
2007-2010 Organizer of the Central Arkansas Gatherings on Philosophy (monthly discussion group for
Philosophy faculty from several local colleges and universities)
2006 Nashville Forum on Christianity and The Environment (with Beth Conklin and Jonathan Gilligan)
2004 God and Politics, Vanderbilt University
2003 Emerson Bicentennial Conference (with Michael Broderick), Vanderbilt University
Academic Honors, Grants, and Awards
2011-present Faculty Affiliate for the Furman University Shi Center for Sustainability
2012 Furman University RPG Grant to attend the Society for Philosophy of Religion meeting in
Savannah, GA.
2010 Nominated by Hendrix College Provost for Franklin and Marshall Junior Scholars Fellowship
2009 Award in Recognition of Service – Hendrix College Students for Black Culture
2006 Vanderbilt University Berry Award for Departmental Service
2005 Vanderbilt University Center for the Study of Religion and Culture Summer Graduate Fellowship
2005 Vanderbilt University Robert Penn Warren Humanities Center Summer Graduate Fellowship
(Declined)
2005 Vanderbilt University Summer Research Grant in Arts and Science (Declined)
2005 The Chancellor’s List
2004 Summer Fellow – Howard V. and Edna H. Hong Kierkegaard Library
2004 Vanderbilt University Summer Research Grant in Arts and Science
2003-2004 Philosophy Departmental Fellowship – Vanderbilt University
2003 Invited Participant – Vanderbilt University Summer Institute for Social and Political Thought
2003 Philosophy Department Travel Grant – Vanderbilt University
2003 Graduate School Travel Grant – Vanderbilt University
2001 Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award – Florida State University
2001 Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society
1999 U.S.A.A. Academic All-American
1999 Who’s Who in American Universities and Colleges
1999 National Honor Roll
1999 Excellence in History Award – Lee University
1998-1999 Alpha Chi National Honors Scholarship Society
1996-1999 Honors Scholarship – Lee University
1998-1999 Kappa Lambda Iota History Honors Society – Lee University.
1997 Semester in Europe: Cambridge, England – Lee University
One of twenty students chosen by an extensive application and interview process to spend a
semester in England studying British history and culture. Semester thesis: Form and Function in
Gothic Cathedrals
1995 Presidential Scholarship – Lee University
Professional Organizations
Positions Held:
South Carolina Society of Philosophy – Vice President (2013-present)
Society of Continental Philosophy and Theology – Executive Board Member (2013-present)
American Academy of Religion (Southeast Region) – Philosophy of Religion Section Chair (2011-present)
Society of Christian Philosophers (Central Region) – Committee Member (2010-present)
North Texas Philosophical Association – Member at Large (2010)
Memberships:
Society for Philosophy of Religion (invited member since 2012)
Levinas Research Seminar (invited member since 2008)
American Philosophical Association
American Academy of Religion
Society of Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy
Society of Continental Philosophy and Theology
Society of Christian Philosophers
North American Levinas Society
Søren Kierkegaard Society
References
Available Upon Request